Re: What frequency limit I should plan for when choosing oscilloscope for TV repair?
I think I have something which I can work with. This is 0 to 200 VDC. Would this work if I added a bridge rectifier and some filter caps? Well, the better question is would it be accurate, considering there would be losses during rectification. Would that be enough to make a difference? I'm not looking for super accuracy, but within +-2 volts and 0.2 amps would be great.
I can easily tap the secondary winding to get the supply voltage. I can get close to what I need, then make a buck converter.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/200V-100A-DC...IAAOSwDk5UF72X
I think I have something which I can work with. This is 0 to 200 VDC. Would this work if I added a bridge rectifier and some filter caps? Well, the better question is would it be accurate, considering there would be losses during rectification. Would that be enough to make a difference? I'm not looking for super accuracy, but within +-2 volts and 0.2 amps would be great.
I can easily tap the secondary winding to get the supply voltage. I can get close to what I need, then make a buck converter.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/200V-100A-DC...IAAOSwDk5UF72X
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